
Furious anti-tourist protesters blast holidaymakers & hotel workers with water guns & hurl smoke bombs in Barcelona
HUNDREDS of fed-up locals have descended onto the streets of Barcelona - blasting holidaymakers with waterguns and launching smoke bombs.
Under the slogan "Tourism steals our bread, homes, and future", the demonstrations in the Spanish capital came amid a huge wave of anti-tourism protests across the country.
11
Protesters shoot toy water guns during a demonstration against mass tourism in Barcelona, June 15
11
A hotel worker reacts as demonstrators shoot water pistols and coloured smoke
11
Protesters use water guns as a symbol against mass tourism
11
A protester holds a banner that reads 'Tourism is killing Barcelona'
Credit: Getty
11
The march in Barcelona come amid a wave of similar protests across the country
Credit: Getty
Similar protests occurred this time last year, with both demonstrations being organised by the Assembly of Neighbourhoods for Tourism Degrowth.
A spokesperson for the group said they had encouraged members to bring water pistols, which he said had become "a popular symbol of resistance against the plundering of the tourism monoculture".
Daniel Pardo Rivacoba added that the tourism industry was "incompatible with life", and demanded "tourism degrowth now".
Astonishing images showed scores of furious activists calling for the decline of tourism in their city and across Spain.
Pointing their loaded water guns in the air and at holidaymakers, they called for the boycott of AirBnB and the end of rampant tourism.
Some were seen refilling their weapons using public water fountains, while others even taped up hostels in an attempt to keep tourists locked in their accommodations.
Riot police lined up to monitor the situation and keep the marches in check.
Demonstrators also used smoke flares and vandalised shops such as the Louis Vuitton store in Passeig de Gràcia.
The march set off from Jardinets de Gràcia just after 12:30pm local time.
Workers rights amid soaring overtourism were at the centre of the rally.
Anti-tourist protesters take over sightseeing coach in Majorca with smoke bombs ahead of mass march tomorrow
Unions representing migrant workers, street vendors and cleaners took part in the huge protests.
Spokesperson Pardo also said that the tourism industry "subjects the people who work in it to the worst working and salary conditions".
He cited the housing crisis as another devastating impact of mass tourism.
The controversial expansion of Barcelona-El Prat Airport has also been a flashpoint for locals.
A spokesperson for one of the campaigns against this expansion, called Zeroport, emphasised that this message was being delivered to politicians and not to tourists.
Ariadna Cotèn said: "Tourists are not really to blame for this situation happening in Barcelona."
But her message didn't stop the hundreds of raging tourists who shouted in English for tourists to "go home".
11
Demonstrators gather during the protest against mass tourism
Credit: Reuters
11
People attach stickers against tourists during the demonstration
Credit: Alamy
11
Riot police keep watch on in the demonstrations
Credit: Getty
They held placards with messages such as "one more tourist, one less neighbour", and "tourism is killing Barcelona".
Anti-tourism protests also unfolded on Sunday in holiday hotspot Ibiza, Donostia-San Sebastián, Palma, Granada, and the Pyrenees.
But they have also spread across Europe - with some taking place in Lisbon, Portugal and across Italy this weekend.
It comes just one day after Spanish protesters held up a sightseeing bus in Palma de Majorca ahead of the major anti-tourism demonstrations.
The raging locals said the popular Spanish island is overwhelmed by tourists and driven by profit over local needs.
These demonstrations came after Spain's first major overtourism protests of the year kicked off in April after thousands of people across 40 cities took to the streets.
Majorca, one of the centres of the protests last year, hosted the first mass protests of the year.
Nearly 40 organisations from the Balearic Islands are believed to have marched in Palma.
What is overtourism?
Overtourism refers to the phenomenon where a destination experiences a volume of tourists that exceeds its manageable capacity
The term is often used to describe the negative consequences of mass tourism, which includes overcrowding and environmental issues
As a result, popular destinations have become less enjoyable for both visitors and locals
Local communities, in particular, bear the brunt, facing rising costs and a depletion of resources
In response, national and local governments have started to implement measures to reduce overtourism
Some solutions include: Safeguarding historical and heritage sites
Promoting off-peak travel
Tourism caps and regulations
Promoting lesser-known destinations
Later, in May, thousands flooded the streets of the Canary Islands in Spain's third wave of protests of the year.
Demonstrations took place across the Spanish archipelago's islands, including Tenerife, Lanzarote, Gran Canaria and Fuerteventura.
The march carried the slogan: "The Canary Islands are not for sale, they are loved and defended."
Other banners read: "The Canary Islands have a limit and so does our patience" and "Enough is enough!"
Spain's anti-mass tourism movement began gaining serious momentum in April 2024 - particularly in popular tourist destinations.
Locals have been demanding an end to the problems associated with mass tourism, including pollution, traffic chaos, the lack of affordable housing and low wages for tourism workers.
11
Red smoke bombs were used in the capital
Credit: AFP
11
Protesters fill water guns on a fountain
Credit: Getty
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
25 minutes ago
- Telegraph
My day with Spanish anti-tourist activists giving Britons a soaking
Not long after we set off from near Gaudí's house, we came across our first target: a Louis Vuitton store. After one activist climbed a ladder to deliver a political speech, protesters, including a child, began spraying the store front. One scribbled 'Free Palestine' on the wall before a red smoke bomb engulfed us all. This was supposed to be an anti-tourism protest in Barcelona, one of many co-ordinated across southern Europe on Sunday. I had joined for the day to witness what it was like to be on the other side and see the sweeping pushback against over-tourism through the lens of locals. After making a short political stand, the Assembly for Tourism Degrowth moved on, with the tourist magnet of the Sagrada Familia church in our sights. I was now armed with a water pistol I'd been given by a figurehead in the group, Daniel Pardo, who was leading us past the Generator Hostel. Two young women slapped 'Tourists Go Home' stickers on the windows. Mr Pardo, seeing a window of opportunity, ordered the demonstration to stop. Next thing I knew, water guns were trained on the hostel entrance. For the tourists inside, it was initially amusing. Then came the tape. Activists began crossing the front entrance repeatedly, symbolically 'barring' entry with red-and-white ribbon. It was too much for one hostel employee, who stormed out shouting in frustration. Protesters sprayed him with their water pistols as he tore through the tape, grabbed one of the guns, and returned fire. A brief scuffle broke out, with pushing and shoving, before he was eventually pulled back inside. Moments later, another activist emerged from the crowd and picked up where the soaking had left off. He kicked a smoke bomb into the hostel, where horrified tourists – including children – looked on. The group moved on again, this time towards their biggest prize: the Sagrada Familia, a symbolic target for the protesters given it is visited by five million tourists every year. Police blocked their path and even officers were caught by the odd squirt from water guns. After a 30-minute stand-off, the group was allowed to proceed to within sight, but not within reach, of the famous basilica. On the way, protesters targeted outdoor restaurant tables. Gabriel and Rachel, tourists from Los Angeles, were among those caught in the crossfire. While Gabriel sat over his soggy avocado lunch, he told me that it was annoying but insisted it wouldn't stop him returning to Barcelona. At this point, I should make it clear I did not fire my water gun. Many protesters insist their fight isn't with the tourists themselves, but with the political and economic model that they say allows mass tourism to overwhelm their city. Rents in Barcelona have soared and neighbourhoods once filled with families are now dominated by short-term lets, particularly Airbnbs. Not only this but many local shops have vanished, replaced by souvenir stalls and endless Turkish cafes, particularly around areas such as La Rambla and Poblenou. Residents say elderly neighbours are struggling to afford food and bills while landlords and corporations cash in. 'We have a big problem with housing in Barcelona. Some people are lucky just to eat or turn on the lights,' said Francisca García, who joined the protest. For groups like hers, tourism is not just a nuisance but a form of 'economic colonisation,' where quality of life is sacrificed for the comfort of short-term visitors. Their goal, they insist, is not better tourism but less of it. That may be true for most activists but their actions sometimes blur the line. The most common chant that echoed throughout the day was: 'Tourists go home, refugees welcome.' Message may be getting through At one point, a protester shouted into a microphone that Gaudí built the Sagrada Familia for locals, not tourists who leave it looking like a 'shit-tip'. At the end of the protest, when the Assembly read out its manifesto, the language veered towards conspiracy, accusing authorities of 'brutal gentrification' and 'population replacement'. 'For more than two decades, we have seen a large part of the neighbourhood being evicted and practically its entire old town demolished, in a savage attempt to replace its population,' the manifesto reads. Their message, however messy, may be getting through. Barcelona's mayor has announced plans to ban all short-term tourist rentals by 2029. More than 10,000 flats are currently licensed for tourists, and the city hopes to return many of these to locals. 'We are confronting what we believe is Barcelona's largest problem,' said mayor Jaume Collboni. The movement is no longer a fringe concern, with protests also taking place across southern Europe on Sunday in Madrid, Palma, Venice and Lisbon. Tourists are undoubtedly starting to take notice – it's becoming harder to ignore. Even away from the protests, my hotel made a point of proudly advertising its commitment to 'sustainable tourism' in the room, as though it were a key part of its appeal. Sander and Luke Dingle, visiting from Florida, told me their hotel had posted warnings about the protest but they weren't deterred. 'We'll keep travelling around Spain, we're going to Madrid in a few days and we'll probably come back to Europe next year,' they said. Indeed, tourism in Barcelona is still booming. More than 11.7 million tourists visited the city in 2024, a 5 per cent increase on the previous year. The Spanish government in recent days has also approved a €3.2 billion expansion of the city's airport, indicating there will be no sign of the industry slowing down. It seems inevitable that tourism will continue to thrive in Barcelona but if today is anything to go by, the activists won't be letting up. Visitors might just have to pack an extra waterproof next to their factor 50.


Daily Record
an hour ago
- Daily Record
Protests in Spain see 30,000 storm city's streets to tell holidaymakers 'go home'
A peaceful Sunday was ruined for tourists in both Majorca and Ibiza as thousands of protesters took to the streets, with one mob even holding up a cruise ship Protesters in Spain, riled by the strain of mass tourism on housing and services, have hit the streets in British holiday hotspots once more, brandishing signs demanding tourists to 'go home. '. Majorca and Ibiza, usually peaceful escapes for Brits seeking sun and tranquillity, were echoed with the uproar from thousands of demonstrators this Sunday as they sought to pressure authorities into action. Holidaymakers were left gobsmacked, witnessing local inhabitants voicing their grievances over the inundation of cruise ships, private planes, and holiday let landlords, blamed for escalating living costs and tarnishing the charm of their idyllic Balearic islands. At one juncture during the protest, said to have drawn 30,000 people to Palma's streets according to organisers, police stepped in at a central bar to shield patrons from protesters' heckles and drumbeats. Starting at 6pm in Palma's centre and mirrored by a smaller rally in Ibiza, the protesters disturbed visitors' evening dinner with chants of "tourists go home" and placards proclaiming "Majorca is not for sale," along with "Your vacations, our anxiety." At the demonstrations, some expressed their anger towards "guiris", the local slang for Brits or foreigners, but the central issue remained the rise of Airbnb-style rentals which have transformed considerable parts of residential housing into holiday lets, leading to soaring rents. One local told the Mail, "I'm protesting because I don't want 80 per cent of my money to go on rent. I don't want to be forced to speak only English or German in my apartment block. "I don't want my friends to have to go to the mainland when they have children just to be able to afford a dignified life, a lot of us are fed up." A 32-year-old Master's graduate residing in Majorca stated: "I'm here because I cannot afford to buy my own place, I'm having to live with my parents because the rent is also too much. "There are also far too many people coming to the island for holiday, our resources cannot cope, there needs to be a limit." The Balearic Islands of Spain played host to over 15 million international visitors last year, with a population hovering around 1.2 million. In certain tourist hotspots, it is estimated that as many as one in three homes are being used for holiday accommodation. More protests similar to the one on Sunday are scheduled for the summer, not only in the Balearics but also in mainland hotspots like Barcelona and the ever-popular Canary Islands. In past years, these demonstrations have caused significant disruption for holidaymakers, with protestors confronting sunbathers on the beach and even engaging in heated disputes with irate tourists.


Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
A Michelin Star capital of the UK is a tiny village with more stars than Tokyo
Aughton is a tiny village in Lancashire, which has become the UK's Michelin Star capital after a fifth was awarded to Moor Hall in the latest Michelin Guide Aughton, a quaint village straddling the border of Lancashire and Merseyside, may appear to be your typical English hamlet. With its tree-lined avenues, grand homes and expansive countryside, it's an idyllic spot for peaceful Sunday walks away from the hustle and bustle of city life. Not only is it home to a university and a popular bi-weekly market, but Aughton also serves as the picturesque backdrop for Chorley-born chef Mark Birchall's acclaimed Moor Hall restaurant. In 2017, just months after opening, Moor Hall bagged its first Michelin star, swiftly followed by another in 2018. The Barn at Moor Hall, a more laid-back sister establishment, was also bestowed with a star that same year. In 2023, the area's prestige was further elevated when So-Lo on Town Green Lane received a fourth star. And just this week, the village celebrated an extraordinary fifth Michelin Star, with Moor Hall receiving the honour for the third time. This is an astounding achievement given the size of the village, equating to roughly one star for every 1,600 inhabitants, outshining even Tokyo, which prides itself on having more of these culinary awards than any other city worldwide, reports the Express. While this might surprise many, Mark Birchall himself remains steadfast in his belief in Aughton's unique charm. Speaking to LancsLive, he revealed his long-standing ambition to open a restaurant amidst the abundant resources of his home county. Mark, hailing from Lancashire, was always passionate about opening a restaurant in his home county. He stated: "We're surrounded by amazing producers, farmers, growers. If there's anything we can't grow, we'll start on the doorstep and work our way out." The emotional moment unfolded as Mark was named the exclusive new recipient of the coveted Three Star honour during Monday night's dazzling Michelin Guide Awards Ceremony. Overwhelmed with joy at receiving the Three Stars, Mark expressed his astonishment with an expletive-laden exclamation: "F***ing hell!". Reflecting on his aspirations, Mark shared: "I think you kind of dream about these things," and added, "You kind of almost act it out in your mind of how you will be, but the emotion is incredible." Recalling the elation of his first star in 2017, he conveyed how phenomenal this new accolade felt, saying: "We got our first star in 2017 and that feeling is incredible, but this is one of the best feelings ever, this really has destroyed it. Mega, amazing." Mark credited his success to a strong team ethos, elaborating: "A good team. The core team have been with me from the start, I've got a great core. We look after our guests, really try to make them feel special and focus around that and the quality of the food. We've got amazing surroundings. The support of my business partners, this is eight years and it's incredible." Michelin inspectors heaped praise on chef Mark Birchall after their visit, stating: "At Moor Hall, chef Mark Birchall and his team have continued to hone their craft and have now achieved new levels of excellence. The ingredients, many from the kitchen garden, are outstanding; the chefs' culinary technique is hugely impressive; and the judgement of flavours, of when to prioritise simplicity and when to add complexity, is exemplary. "The inspectors particularly enjoyed the classically based turbot cooked in brown butter, with seasonal kuri squash and Mylor prawns." Hidden away inside a Grade-II* listed edifice from the 13th century, Moor Hall is where heritage meets modern gourmet prowess. Since Andy and Tracey Bell commandeered the establishment back in 2015, they've reimagined it with a generous multi-million-pound refurbishment. With nearly eight years under his belt, Mark presides over a menu informed by a 'farm-to-fork' ideology, extolling Croftpak Nurseries' tomatoes, strawbs from nearby farms, and the highly esteemed Mrs Kirkham's Lancashire Cheese. Occupying his current station as head honcho in the kitchen, Mark has previously sharpened his knives as the lead chef at the triple-starred L'Enclume in Cumbria, where he developed an acute appreciation for the calibre of local provisions. "It's just amazing," he enthused. "I mean, Kirkham's is world class, it's unbelievable. We're really, really fortunate, we're on the edge of the Lake District which has fantastic meat. There's brilliant beef and lamb up there." Moor Hall, now flaunting three Michelin stars, redefines dining with its dedication to sourcing extraordinary and sometimes surprising produce. Notably, within a mere stone's throw from the restaurant, local grower Molyneux produces kale—an unusual crop for Lancashire but one that's highly valued worldwide. "It's all about using the best ingredients or products that we can buy and turn it into something special," he proclaimed. "And making those products shine." With its West Lancashire setting, Moor Hall promises more than premier produce; the location also offers guests an intersection of urban access and rural allure that Mark belts as "incredible" for both visitors and regional farmers. He asserts: "The surrounding ancient agricultural landscape of West Lancashire we call home offers some of the most picturesque scenery in the country. "When I set out on my Moor Hall journey with business partners Andy and Tracey Bell, we shared a vision to bring together the very best surroundings with an unrivalled dining experience. I truly believe that in the short space of time since we opened our doors, we have delivered just that. "The stars, rosettes and accolades are indeed incredible achievements, and I will always strive to make things better. This said, it is the comfort and enjoyment of our guests that is the ultimate focus of everything we do here. It's about making people want to come back. We want them to feel like they don't want to leave, and they do so already planning their return visit."